St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 17, Number 51, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 9 July 1892 — Page 3
WWW 1) g BMiw4 ®. b A MAD POET
and threatened 0 ?^ 0/1100 re 0011 ^, ‘“Mshme^Xe^ QUt .” verses wrong. Said he? * t P ” ntod hi 3 dwell forever in a J FOte ’ r ° .von idiots nut it to ?«P f and The mortified editor l * ° ” with a vial of Ar v- P l ^"^ him Pellets, a y c ± Pleasant enology. 5 subscription and an
The little “Pellets” . sick and nervous hoZl^ t'^ ]y cnro costiveness, and all der->n‘ 1C ’ buio,lsn <h% stomach, bowS ™Mi^ tho contract, but the sm’tiw’tt a . ,ar £« V'orld do the b U «in e c S ^ Pleasant Pel'ets ti • , Purees Wbnt tllo'S off .Sr .S° work In tho iwht t, l “V 0 ,0 nnd renovate too r^’ 1 }ey cleansa b J™ satisfaction or voer ^ la,an ^ eed to giro | You only pay for X? That’s to» I ,■ ^oo</,you get, Pierce's mSicincT^7 I p l lan ail Pn druggists. " ° “ re So ou » through
AT J TAKE T NEW AND “™g lex^ON Is", o .’"' ' ND HSSBSSsr I «“ tea. It Is called’ aild 13 F«>pared for use as eiily
Why I know precisely ho^T A y° u ‘eel; iti s that ncrAre You I vous . writable feeling; I your back troubles you. Sick?” I and . w ^en you try to read a bttle, your head kne^~it nh —PTa 016 . 3, Isn ’ttbatso? I the doctor! Get a
this'Thmgmyseffi’but am never troubled now. Do as I tell you, my friend.” I Prudent women who best understand their
LiUUVUI ttVIHVH »»»»'-' ailments find in the Compound a remedy for all their distressing ills. It removes at once those pains, aches, and weaknesses, brightens the spirits, restores digestion, and invigorates the system. All Druggists sell it, or sent by mail, in form of Fills <»r Lozenges, on receipt of SI 00. Liver Pills, Correspondence freely answered. Address in confidence. T.Yi.tA E. PINKHAM MED. CO., ! - xv. '•
gssssssssS S Swift’s Specific S SA Tested Remedy Q. For All g | Blood am! Skira | s Biseases s SA reliable cure for Contagious Cw Blood Poison, Inherited Scro--4^ fula and Skin Cancer. As a tonic for delicate Women and Children it has no equal. S Being purely vegetable, is harmless in its effects. *<3 SA treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free on application. (J* Druggists Sell It. CS 2 SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. v.j SssssssssS ® © ®“© 'qF®©'©©' o TAKE „ :wßWiii«o The first dose often astonishes the invalid, giving' elasticity of mind, buoy- @ ancy of body, good digestion, regular ■ bowels and solid flesh. Price 1 , 25cts. ®®©©® O O C 0 1
BYON & HEALY, 53 Monroe St., Chien rm. | UHi Mail Free their newly enlarged Catalogue of Band Instruments, Uni-Z' k forms and Equipments, 400 Fine 11(1 L lustrations, describing every article z z f required by Bands or Drum Corps, A Contains Instructions for Amateur Bands, i a Exercisesand Drum Major’s Tactics. By / i»> Laws and a Selected List of Band Music
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FOR SUMMER COMPLAINTS Perry Davis’ Pain-Killer BEST MEDICINE IN THE WORLD. HEMOODIA TVE ONLY SI'RECIEE. Price gl.oo by mail. HEMoROIA CO.. 110 Fulton St., New York. [best polish eh tkFwqrld. 00 NOT BE DECEIVED“ with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints winch stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn off. The Rising Sun Rtovo Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS.
Immigration Law,/ eSted ' upon^mhJt^ become a burden . X enforced. The time of 3 /?T\ Sed and ^c" U i la ßation should be edenS^ 11 ? 6 01 nat ' ahzed person should* be no n aturone year after he becomes"" cHizen° V ° te ” ntl) quire 1 E* in”Vh^ to ac- I limitation of individual -n<i a ” d " e favor the ship of land, ah unearn^?". cor P° ra te ownerrailroad companies o? ' b? ants of bands tc should be reclaimed ther cor I>orations Y . Tbe Keco »t Lynchings. ! of th^Rcpubhean on the part resulted in the present have Iwe demand that every citizen mob law - an<i j 8 ° f b >' ^wtitmioua/S^ 1B
.» ‘’“WUUUIS, ... O "° D »y «>f Rest. right ^one^u"'s\-^ b T la ^in theb Dim- * aVOrln S Arbitration, iciil and humaleeconomaifferences. u of s ettling national Speeulatinn 1.
-r^« ta i, on Margins. Speculation in margins th,, gram, money and nmfn f’ the . cor nering ol of pools, trust” and com hi nd w hQ ^ forniatior arbitrary advancement of ! lnatlons f or the I pressed. " nent of Prices should be supi’ensions, tlectedPtoiwwer^^wil^ever^rahr 1 - 0 ” party ’ 11 to disabled veterans of the rt? Ust Pensions navy, their widows and orphans ‘°” anny an - b —— 'J-lhLgghool Que tfon,
tion of public moneys for sectarian schools. . We declare that only by united support ol t such common schools, taught in the English ! language, can we hope to become and remain a homogeneous and harmonious people. Ari-aigumeiit of the Old Barties. We arraign the Republican and Democratic parties as false to the standards reared by their founders; as faithless to the principles of tho illustrious leaders of the past to whom they do homage with the lips; as recreant to the “higher law," which is as inflexible in political affairs as in personal life; and as no longer embodying the aspirations of the American people or inviting the confidence of enlightened, progressive patriotism. Their protest against the admission of "moral issues" into politics is a confession of their own moral degeneracy. The declaration of an eminent authority that municipal misrule is “the one conspicuous failure of American politics" follows as a natural consequence of such degeneracy, and is true alike of cities under Republican and Democratic con-
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VILIVO umm livpuoiivtws — v ..... - trol. Each accuses the other of extravagance in Congressional appropriations, and both are alike guilty. Each protests when ovt of power against the infraction of the civil-service laws, and each in power violates those laws in letter and spirit. Each professes fealty to the interests of the toiling masses, but both covertly truckle to the money power in their administration of public affairs. Even the tariff issue as represented in the Democratic Mills and the Republican McKinley bill is no longer treated by them as an issue upon great and divergent principles of government, but is a mere catering to different sectional and class interests. The attempt in many States to wrest the Australian ballot system from its true purpose and to so deform it as to render it extremely difficult for new parties to exercise the rights of suffrage is an outrage upon popular government. The competition of both the parties for the vote of the slums and their assiduous courting of the liquor power and subserviency to the money power has resulted in placing those powers in the position of practical arbiters of the destinies of the nation. We renew our protest against these perilous tendencies and invite all citizens to join us in the upbuilding of a party that has shown in five national campaigns that- it prefers temporary defeat to an abandonment of the claims of justice, sobriety, personal rights, and the protection of American homes. Italian Boots. I tab an boot factories are manufacturing b ;ots of a single pai rn. The heels and soles are not sewn on, but riveted to the uppers in such a way that if the heels are worn down on one side they can be taken off and turned round. Worn soles can be reI moved in the same way and new , ones put on. The People of Europe. The most densely peopled continent is Europe. The number of people in Europe is known with a great degree of accuracy. There are about 360,000,000 people; and the continent , which accommodates all these people is so small tint there are upon it an average of ninety-three people to the square mile. Coin in a Potato. A gentleman in Ireland recently, * (m cutting open a potato at dinner, ] found in the center a half sovereign, around which the vegetable had grown. Though discolored it was in j a good state of preservation, and is I now a pretty ornament to a watch j chain. No man is born into this world I whose work is not born with him: there is always work, and tools tc work withal, for those who will, and blessed arc the heaVy hands of toil. “Burglar-proof glass” is among ■ the late inventions. The domestic I window cleaner would be more interested in dirt-proof glass.
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I PR °HIBmoN PLATFORM «.^7, Oown assembled. acknow the source of all trn O ™ R Almighty God as as the standardi towhfehX^ a ” d His 'aw must conform to sect r > the Jj ' nan enactments ami prosperity, prese t? b ?T lngs of Peace tion of principles; 3 tbe folb ln gdeclara-
The . I ‘ , ° MbiUOn °f Liquor Traffic. • ne liquor tmfflo <« „ arch enemy of popular Jove™ civilization, the he nuisance, ft is the oA^ m i ent J nn<l a P»bthat corrupt polities nr™ l ° f tbe for oes crime, cle^radp tbp P^nmote poverty and the will oTthe ^F e ^mi Ae 1 }?® 6 life > in o the hands of rap- d< n 7 countr y All laws that nndcrX ® la f ß lnt erests, legalize and protect this ° f re B n l a tion government share in its ill “®* C * or niake the vicious in i rinciple an i*"*; A ten . e " lns are remedy." 1 e aM powerless as a
- y . - <4,0 Os the inanufimture f sa)e h imi n< t re K sup P re ssion tion and transportation of , FL^m a v 01 ?’ ex P°rtaj a beverage by Federal aim s? h ? llc . hquors as and the full powers of the ^ tatc ^^slation, be exert el to semirn l t, l ^2 vcmmea t should
that fails to recognize the do?} 1 ' t An V Partv this issue in American nnHM Om, ? UIIt nature of lof the support of the p< P o de' 08 18 undeser ving Woman Suffrage. on account” 8 smx’lnd r W‘t to vote
eeive equal wages' withoFu rlg 1 ^ ) ~. As t<> Money. - by the” generef govern? nent Bh °i Ulfl be isaue<l • flcient quantities tc meeA’ <m* y ? nd ln Bus- , business and give fun / c . demands of Plcyment of labor TAPPPrtHtdty for the em- ! 1 the volume of mono- is end . an Crease in • dividual or corpor-tinn d ? ma nded, and no inj j l3ake any profit throng” ire Ol } !d be “howed to be made a legal tend “/forAlJ e ‘ H sh ould i”• Pfbhc and privare ’^ytnent of all be fixed at a definite sum " me sh ould , to increase with our incr^i? P ^ 0 - ad « T . T ’* e T « ri «’. I against foreign coi^nt only as a defense I upon or bar out our p^ levy tariff 8 | hets, revenue being inX” th eirmar- I i means necessary to an econo* ’• A bo res idue ol tion of the Government < dm"i l ? l administra- ' evymg a burden X w Vlh 1 e > ralspd b ? instead of upon what we consuml° Ple pOssess Control Os Kailroads. Kailroad, teleoraou , potations should be conreoiif^ ‘f r Public coruent in the in e .W 0 C ' l b y the Govern- <
foste iKTroiiElisTs. WHAT vyA€??v^^Tim* WAY OF WEATHE > Storm Wav® Will Cross u „ l‘P Central f ^ r ”s te Gr 4 Reach lug the ' Ea t” ” y U'° * 4 ’ the IBtlv ' 'tern StatH About
Meteorologic-ii nr I 1011., cross lho close of the 11th ii ,n ^ountatt by, about the i. tn " tho Ea stern Ites '
me ittn. j tbe ™Sd'lc?u,d “ t and it will b > -it ito ooihern latites / 13th to Ith 'afto,.^ gre ; ates t fore^m / Mississ/pp”’ dftol paßSl ^ east ofc 9 T
! h0 ?! ea kcenS U val l mv S ^4
- and the Easto n o+ » J u,J °Ut th^ pearanee in m i . Cft made il 1 will have spread t^ato an<l l ' dimensions by t ho i.- th ° f JulvH I have no rea on tn i ° A ll -' 1 I mate, made in istn th-it' crops will be ’on-id ’ I ‘ ldt Ut S re tit| ' I", .“''“'"J « «™r«ri„r tho SU,,?';‘°j tbs of more than 2co i ] n ( i were notg< neraPy - n ~,. ~ fc e^vaf where ciops would hdi flHion ^i| v <g»-tation and Coiih Th e'a bumbi ’• of kX!: ..oV 8 ,h
} other tram-p r e'lA-0,-•‘‘o-'. " rs ;l coal veins of <ho '<'b' ' c .” 11!d mil order to be in the e< -d 1 ? ° b< T der s i heen deposited 11 A'' H , h '‘' e'^. V 's-H iGCIk” L’el Hl M n • . 4 forme !of H.pe abm Z.' Vt ln boulders an ' otlwimo'b " H h i s in deep water bv i} ' ’ <raiu Por.e< I forming coal vc in ~t . ,‘!' €r 1111 * the •m impossH/li' y -r ' ■ -’dtnc lime is vegetation th r'. mud be dry mJ’’ 0 '” laud afterwu d < ov< i i ^'-amp and wi;h these co v. lip water, «'•’* found on h d '” U ‘ a;d er 8 But, as Xewberr/'X^ 1 ^,;:? 11 rnerous cams wh, .-o 'thes r h have come fomr in »,... * ,v ” iha«
hfdded i n \h ■'i'Jj \ ;il '- v i s I'^'hd im- , mers din ccal. ’ toai P* My nnReinomber that ihoc^ « , . boulders are not otliei wlse°f ' !m i bodd l sd vicinity of the ( < a > Vi j., s , ni ‘ n 'be erollyn cognized‘. lq ,u' ’ fl! ' e ^‘niormations that lie’ bin'll away tothe nonhwaal ' o advocate giro n., * 0 v ' ' s ome 1 means bv V'-’.b n n awnahle t.on was gio.ving 11 b la- i hv.demly tins proves that too 1 veins were lu «1 .. • u ‘ 1 °al where m t grow, and todkiXs tf etRU ° ‘ ‘ -J - —|
of the c-dmi.' Prof. Vail says that a boulder weigh-’7 ing 20* ponds, found in the midd e of a coal seam, is. now in the museum at | Columbus, Ohio, and is an irreiutame ! evidence that the eoai vein from which j it was taken finished its formation afte the boulder fell into it and that foreign j boulders thus imbedded are o ten found at Nelsonv.. u and Carbond co, Ohio. Numerous ins ances are known where clay seams no thici e.' t ion a knife blade ! are so md parting two <oal veins, no vegetable fossils in the clay and a foot : or more of coal above this clay seam. : How could the v< getation exist to form : these heavy coal veins above that thin as paper clay seam? Is it not far more reasonable that the ■ coal fell from above into the sea, and after a portion of it settled, a great river, at its flood, muddied the water, the clay quickly setting on the first coal vein and after that the carbon that 1 still floated in the waters settled on the clay ocean? Carbon forms in the stove-pipe or the chimney from smoke, because the oxygen of the atmosphere does not reach : the smoke in sufficient quantity to com- ' bine with it end form carbonic acid gas. : But the greater portion if the carbon which is carried up in the form of smoke forms the gas by uniting with oxygen This carbonic acid gas is the food of plant life, and although it is not ; combustible —will not burn—it fur- । nishes the carbon of vegetable growth, and is the substance of vegetation i which gives its fuel properties. Carbonic acid gas also unites with, or j dissolves in water, in the proportion of ' 2 volumes of gas to 3 of water. There are, therefore, two ways by which carbon in the atmosphere may return to solids of the earth; one through veg Nation and one through water. Chemists tell us that there is now about one part of carbonic acid gas in our atmosphere to 25,000 parts o. othei matter. The smoke that constantly rises from all kinds of fires, including volcanoes, Satu: ales our atmosphere with carbon, and we know that a port on of this comes back to solid earth through vegetation. But does any j art of it change back to carbon in any other way? To utterly overthrow the accepted theory of the origin of coal, all that is necessary is to show how the carbon could have reached and remained for a time suspended in our atmosphere without destroying all anirtial and vegetable life, and this I will endeavor to do when I am done with the negative side of the : subje t and proceed to the discussion of its affirmative. Copyrighted 1592, by W. T. Fostr. r Stains caused by sewing machine oil । may be removed by rubbing the spots , in a weak solution of ammonia before | washing the garment. i —- ; Certainly man is of kin to the beasts j by his body, and if he be not of kin to God by his spirit, he is a base and ignoble creature. 1 ; A Milan, Tenn., man, a few days ago, - traded his wife for three yearlings, onej half acre of bottom land and half an acre of timber land. j A twelve-ounce goose egg is one of i the curiosities on exhibition in Hart- . fjord, Conn. Its smallest circumference is nine inches.
Ways of Killing. | all how foolish it is to attempt flare which rider it is that gets tho enjoyment out of cycling, says the ue Bulletin. The racing man is sve that his is the onl.y way to aciisli this; the scorcher sneers at tho and says the road, not the track, air test of both speed an i pleascyeling; the tourist pities both ’els in exploiing the byways of I n and the highways of fori ign । the club man will tell you tliat I now noth’ng of enjoyment until < |ve r.dden with his club mates on llrun; the slow and easy rider un--ffids not how there can be any confey on this point; he knows his ads are the o ily true ones to gart’l the pleasures there are in ihe . And so it goes, all down the long f the various kinds of riders. Each I . way is right, so far as applies to ivu case, or to those who think as es; each is wiong when he decides i
T yeause s -orching, or loafing or touring : h 4s him best, that it must in conseT/ience be the best for all the other users 7// the wheel. As in o her things in life, /lie pleasure o" one man is often the ; pain of another; what s ems nice to us i ; appears foolish to others. Let each j rider, then, decide for himself us to the I way to get the most speed, benefit or; [pastime out of cycling, and, as he de- ! imands for himself the right to decile I ’which methods he will use, let him al-o f^ive into h'S fellow riders Hie same pvilcge to choose the way they prefer fe enjoy their riding. The sport is T, ifad enough, large enough, and, wo j/ ^pc, fair-minded enough for all,whether 4 fey be racers, tourists, club men or / ftuuterers, for in the end ali are cyclists Ijnd each in his way contributes to the ’ growth and greatness of cycling. Where to Part the Hair. It is interesting to note what a large ■ number of Eastern men are parting their 1 .hair in the middle. In the West this i 1 abit is generally regarded as effemit |te, and many a man who tries to h ake th • change from what is generally n ^sidered manly is laughed out of the ve empt before he has fairly got into the j n ' »it. But in the East this feeling is Jjr-^dently dying out, and the tendency j -7 a parting m the center is getting very ’ iperal—so general, indeed, that if the : m aze continues to grow long at its pres'3 t rate one will begin to locate a man's "h j p e by the way lie parts his hair ine |ad of the way he talks. Nine-tenths ’ the hum n ra e can part the hair 11 ire conveniently in the center than on I ? jin r sic.e, and hair so parted will keep ■ iooth an 1 tidy several hours longer } tn when bruslie 1 from either the right i • ; Qleit. When a man lias what is known ; ■ aa “double crown,” the < nly way he I • ca keep his hair reasonably smooth is . tc k< ep it cut Very short or part it in t| middle. If he lives in the West he grierally adopts the former alternative, een if he catel.es unlimited <-(dds in ejisequem e, but if he is an Eastern I nen he is more likely to adopt the easier juin of parting his hair like a girl, as tae severe critic is apt to call the mid|de parting style.—St. Louis Globe- i mocrat. I.ct There Be Peace In the gastric region. If troubled with nausea ■ from sea sickness, biliousness or other cause, Hostetter's Stomach Hitters' will immediately put a stop to the stomachic disturbance. A ^rominont aiul «inv!ea«ant feature of ’
by the Bitters.' Many persons have i ;v<?ry delicate stomachs which trifling indisvretionsin enting or drinking, or even some sight that is repulsive. di.-mder. Such persons cannot act more wisely than to invigorate their digestive region will) the Bitti rs, a tonic specially adapted to reinforce it. For malaria, rheumatism, kidney troubles, and nervousness the Bitters will be found marvelous!v beneficial, and when sleep is untranquil and appe- , tite variable it soon improves both. It is in fact, a most comprehensive and delightful remedy. Punishment of Spies. Frem h ministers and army Commissioners have agreed upon the de .tils of the anti-spy bill io 1 e submitted to the Chambi r shortly. In its new form the 1 ill stipulates the death penalty :o every spying soldier or official of the military or marine, or official or agent of the state or person intrusted with se- ! cret information asto the defense i f the • country. Life imprisonment in a state pris< n is provided for everyb dy making topographical sketches, examining the railways and highways, or e-tab-lishing special means of < onmun’eation, ■to the detriment of 1 ranee in time u i war. Any editor, moreover, who |u - lishes in his newspaper any military plans, operations or reports which should be k. pt s cret is, according to the bill, to be punishable w.th imprlson- ; merit for two to live years an I with a fine of i6OO to $2,010. Webstei’s Dictionaries. G. &. C. Merriam Co. having won their ' suit a.’ainst the Texas Sifdngs Co. of New । York, f tr offering a -10 years old reprint of the edition of Webster’s Unabridged as ' premium for subscribe-s for their paper, are devoting their aitmtion to several I other suits of a like nature now in the courts, the Tope a Capital Co. of Topeka, Kansas, being one of the latest. They ci a in they are comi elled to do ths in justice alike to the jublic and to themseives and have therefore piven directions to their attorney to prcsecct? in every case where a publi-ber makes use of misleading an o incements The widow of General Custer is not only a beautiful woman but a fascinat- , ing ialker also. She is frequently repo.ted as giving lecti res in various parts of the country, am! her description of “Buffaloes and Buffalo Hunting, in bpr ngfle’d the other evening, lasting two lull ho ’ - said to have been delightfully g nic. The Only Ono Ever Printed-Can You Find the Word.’ 3 here is a 3-inch display advertisement in tliis paper this week which has no two lords alike except one word. The same is | vrue of each new one appearing each week i from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a “Crescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, beautiful lithograpus, or SAMPLES FREE. Sweet Girls. Two young women of Exeter, Me., : while making syrup this spring, cared for the sap of 301* trees. Mrs. F. C. Robertson, of Stokes CoiXity. N. C., is cutt ng her third set 'of teeth. She is in the Btth year of her age. HALL'S CATARRH CURE is a liquid and is taken internally. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Accomplished purposes make the ashes of the world. FIT- .—All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's G e t Nerve • c-t« e.. No Fits after first day's use Mas wlous cures. Treatise and CO trial bottle free to ! I it cases Send to Dr. Kline, KJI Arch St, Phiia, Pa.
The Skill and Knowtertg'e Essential to the production of the most I perfect and popular laxative remedy known, have enabled the California Fig Syrup Co. to achieve a great success in the reputation of its remedy, Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the universal laxative. For sale by all druggists. How to ?ea Under Water. A lens for seeing under water is de- I scribed as produc ug an effect which is both astonishing and del ghtful. It gives distinct vision to objects from • twenty to thirty feet below the surface, ! and which are usually out of ordinary I eye-range. The eye’s loss of extended ■ vision when under water is owing. to the I fact that an < ntirely different focus is . requ'red. The spectacles which can j adjust this focus are made by putting > two watch crystals back to back or with j i the concavities outward. Bloop Vessels ahe sometimes burst by j whooping cough. Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Taic relieves it. Pikl’o Toothache Drops Cure in one Minute. A New York ccuple were recently I married in the head of Bartholdi’s Goddess of Liberty. Nervous, bilious disorders, sick headj ache. Indigestion, less of appetite and coni stipation removed by Beecham’s Pil.s. We may trust those we love, while wo i may not love those we trust. S-arge A/, ,L " X® As a dollar were the scrofula py, sores on toy poor little boy, sickening and disgusting. ' f. They were especially severe y on his legs, back of his ears and on bis head. I gave him Sarsaparilla. In two weeks the sores commenced Joseph Kuby. to heal up; the scales came off and all over his body new and healthy flesh and skin formed. When he had taken two bottles of HOOD'S SAKSAI’AKILXA he was fr e from sores.” Habby K. Ruby, Box 356, ! : Columbia. Penn. HOOD’S riI.ES are a mild, gentle, painless, safe ! and efficient cathartic. Always reliable. 25c. A SICK LIVER Is t he cause of most of the depressing, painful and unpleasant sensatio.isand sutrerin^s with which we ar* afflicted; and the*e >un*erin:rs w.Il continue so l>n: as tho Liver is al owed to rem ii । in t his **ick or shi^^ish c nniition. To stimulate the I iier an<l other digestive organs to a nm m il condition and healthy* activity. tV.c e is no better medicine than RADWAY’S n PILLS, The most perfect, safe and reliable Cathartic that has ever been compounded— PURELY VEGETABLE, j positively containing no Mercury or other deleterij ous substances; having ali tbe beneficial properties j that Mercury is possessed of as a cathartic, without I the danger of any of its evil consequences, they have I eupersed d Mercury, and have become the Pill of Modern Sc.ence. Elegantly coated and without taste I there is no difficulty in swallowing KADWAY’S I’l LI.S ; mild and gentle or thorough in their operations, according to the dose, they are the favorites |of the pre*cut Uiue. They cure all disorders of the St^nach, Liver els, Piles, and all the derangements of Kie Internal Viscera. 25 cents a box—gold by Druggists. DR. RADW AY A CO . 32 Warren Street, X. Y. City. ^veToH*®’ 3^l A NATURAL REMEDY ROE . ; Epileptic Fits, Falling Sickness, Hysterics. St. Vitus Dance, Nervousness, I Hypochondria, Melancholia. In* ebrity, Sleeplessness, Dizziness, Brain "md Spinal Weakness. This medicine has direct action upon . the nerve centers, allaying all irritabili- ) ties, and increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects. A Valuable Rook »n Nervous G, gaL ij Diseases sent free to any address, fMS r and poor patients can also obtain I hLL this medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by tbe Reverend Pastor Koenig. 1 f Fort Wayne, Ind., since 1816, and is now prepared unde r bis direction bj' the KOEMIC MED. CO.. Chicago, 111. Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. 6 for Ss> Large Size, 51,75. 6 Bottles for SO. 00 Mothers’ Friend” MAKES CHUB BIRTH EASY, Colvin, La., Bec. 2, 1886.—My wife used MOTHER’S FRIEND before her third | confinement, and says she would not be j without it for hundreds of dollars. DOCK MILLS. | Sent by express on receipt of price. $1.50 per bet- : tie. Book “To Mothers ” mailed f.ee. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., FOR FALC BY ALL DRUGGISTS. AT L-ANT A , GA-
THE ^GwenElactrlcßelt | CATALOGUE, TELLING ALL ABOUT IT, In English, German, Swedish or Norwegian will be sent to any
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‘ ' address on receipt of ~ Trade Mark.] ' , DR. A. OWEN. 6 C<?ntS The Owen Electric Belt and Appliance Co. 201 TO 211 STATE ST., CHICAGO, ILL. NEW YORK OFFICE, 026 BROADWAYUEMiON THIS PAPER whun ,o _ HAREM TH Si ofbad eatlnc:eure« Sick Headache; jTStoreslomplenomcureKCon-tipatio.u i Scad lor tiM b*m>lo to W 9 W.I 46th bue*^ Mew C.l;, Fa Si ffia ANAKKSlSiavebtn^ant ILEb g Q FOLKS REDUCED
“August Flower” “ I am Post Master here and keep a Store. I have kept August Flower for sale for some time. I think it is a splendid medicine.” E. A. Bond, P. M., Pavilion Centre, N.Y. The stomach is the reservoir. If it fails, everything fails. The liver, the kidneys, the lungs, the j heart, the head, the blood, the nerves j all go wrong. If you feel wrong, look to the stomach first. Put that right at ouce by using August Flower. It assures a good appetite and a good digestion. ® Seasonable Hints. The present weather has given rise to a large number of cases of pneumonia, pleurisy, and rheumatism. All of these diseases begin with a cold. This fastens upon the kidneys and manifests itself in one of the maladies named above. If the sufferer will take Reid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure he will be speedily relieved, I for this great remedy contains no poison. It excites the kidneys to action, stimulates the circulation, relieves the lungs of their burden, and will thus cure the worst case of pneumonia or pleurisy, and will relieve an attack of rheumatism quicker than anything else. It is the only remedy I on the market that will relievo the i consequences of cold, or from au.' ! malady that arises from a cold. Ask your druggist for it, and if he does not have it write to us and we will send it to you by mail or express. Small bottles are 25 cents, large ones 50 cents. Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria, 111. ° N LY TR u E £3? IRON ATONIC %*i purify BLOOD, regulate KIDNEYS, remove LIVER disorder, build strength, renew appetite, restore health and vlgorofyouth. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, that tired feelIng absolutely eradicated. Mini) brightened, brain power increased, | BA IF ft bones, nerves, niusa sSiILW cles, receive new force. InRI 11 « suffering from complaints peLk U I Lil cuiiar to their sex, using it, find _______ a safe, speedy cure. Returns rose bloom on cheeks, beautifies Complex ion. Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear “Cresc'U /x.'A toad us 2 cent stamp for 32-paga TkH T ,-v V "’ C U ''” Btl ‘■““is. Me. nii. t. tiOi Birn ... — Sew? ,Bl ' es ' Bnu * -j Tt beauty .and deflesdek g Section. It has stood »2 II tj'x Ihhe test ot 1U years, mz Wv^Vund is so liarniless ; gtf be sure i Oy b is properly made. • ® I k I Accept no counterA ) feltof BimjlarnaTne. 1 F / I>r. L. A. Sayer sai l r ( toaladyof ihehaus- | Aiw \ ( & patient),‘‘Ai \j bv les will use 5 z ] ¥ therr I recommend ■ / Uri < * ‘Gouraud's Cream? // > as theleastharmful f ail the Skin pre p- ✓ 1 b® f aratloxis ” k J j For all u ver X- Drujrgistaandiancy ' goods Dealers In the U. S.,Canada, and Europei FERD. T. HOEKINS, Prop’r, 37 Great Jones Street, N.Y.
j EWIS’9B%LYE Powdered and Perfumed. gn (PATENTED.! The strongest and purest Lye made. * Unlike other Lye, it being a fine ' powder and packed In a can with remove ble lid, the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 21 minutes without toiling. It is ihe be-t for cleansing xvaste-pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SA LT M’c’H CO. Gen Agts . PhqA, Pa.
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The Oldest Medicine in the World is frobc.cly »R. ISAAC THOMIPSON’S CELEBRATED EYE-WATER. This article is a carefully prepared pnyslcian s prescription, and has been in constant use for nearly a century. There are few diseases to which mankind are subject more distressing than sore eyes, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been 1 tried without success. For all external intlammation of the eyes it is an Infallible remedy. If the directions are followed it will never fail. W e particularly invite the attention of physicians to Its merits. Fer sale by all druggists- JOHN L. THOMPSON, SuNS St C 0„ Troy, N. Y, Established 1797. ‘ RIPANS TABULES regulate. ° the stomach, liver aim bowel?, pun- • 9 the blood, arc- Fate ar.d effectual ;• ♦ / tl»e best medicine known for biliousJ dcss. constipation, dvgjpepsia, fouio ! breath, headache.menuu dcpn . siGn.o ? painful digestion, bad coinpi^xion. ♦ S ah diseases.caused bv failure of ® stomach, liver or bowels to per J • form their proper functions. Persons given to over- * ♦ eating aye benefited by taking one after each neai.r ♦ Price, $2; sample, 15c. At Druggi es, or sent b} man. * © RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., io Spruce St., ^ew } one * ’ $40,000,000 Earned by the £?11 Telephone Patent in 1831. Tour invention may be valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address for full and intel’ig -nt advice, fre^ ofdiaiae t W. W. DUDLEY & < 0., Solicitors of Patents. Pacific Bldg.. 622 F St. N. Washington, D. C. Vention thin paper. FOR EXCHAW For Eastern Property. Good Farming Lands, Houses and Lots, Orange Groves, etc., located in Southern California. For full particulr rs address RALPH ROGERS, 217 West First Street, Les Angeles. Cal. Kii i ilrn^ 11 | I I ■ BIS BB Xo moTe buzzing S Saras Ski a s fen a 8 aro .nd your r ars or diving at your nose or collid ng with your eyes. Use freely; prevent reproduction and secure p-aco. FRED'S DUTCHER DRUG CO.. St. Albans.Vt. PATENTS!PENSIONS! Sender Inventor’s Guide,or How to Obtain a I’.;t at. Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty Laws. PATIULK O’b IRLELL. WnshinHon. D- C* Barlow’S ??W!co Blue. 'Hie Family Wash Blue, for sale by Grocers. C. N. V. s- 8 WHEN AV KITING TO ADVERTISERS, please say you saw the advertiseineat in this j»ai»er. fPiso’s Remedy foi Cstarrh is the Best. Easiest to Use. and Cheapest, Sold by druggists ur xent ny mail. E. T. HazelUne, Warrm Pu. L J
